Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #402: To Give You the Victory

To give you the victory.

Text:

When you go out to war against your enemies, and see horses and chariots and an army larger than your own, you shall not be afraid of them, for the Lord your God is with you, who brought you up out of the land of Egypt. And when you draw near to the battle, the priest shall come forward and speak to the people and shall say to them, ‘Hear, O Israel, today you are drawing near for battle against your enemies: let not your heart faint. Do not fear or panic or be in dread of them, for the Lord your God is he who goes with you to fight for you against your enemies, to give you the victory.’ (Deuteronomy 20:1-4)

Questions:

  • What’s your initial reaction/gut instinct when you have a battle on your hands?
  • What does Scripture say about where the Christian’s reliance should be?

Context, Context, Context: In the passage above from Deuteronomy 20, God is instructing Moses. About what? Warfare. God, knowing all things and knowing how people instinctively react, teaches Moses some fundamentals about whom and what to rely upon when facing battles.

  • First, fear not. That comes straight from verse 1: “. . . you shall not be afraid of them”
  • Second, God teaches Moses why he is not to fear. It comes right there in verse 1, too: “. . . for the LORD your God is with you.” God is there–always.
  • Third, know that it is God who grants the victory. Deuteronomy 20:4 reads, “for the LORD your God is he who goes with you to fight for you against your enemies, to give you the victory.”

Encouragement: I have no idea where you are today in terms of spiritual warfare. What I do know, however, is that spiritual warfare is inevitable: “For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over the present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places” (Ephesians 6:12). But if you are in Christ, dear ones, victory belongs to the Lord. Keep short accounts with the Lord, work hard, and trust God for the results.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #401: Godly Leadership

Text:

When you come to the land that the Lord your God is giving you, and you possess it and dwell in it and then say, ‘I will set a king over me, like all the nations that are around me,’ you may indeed set a king over you whom the Lord your God will choose. One from among your brothers you shall set as king over you. You may not put a foreigner over you, who is not your brother. Only he must not acquire many horses for himself or cause the people to return to Egypt in order to acquire many horses, since the Lord has said to you, ‘You shall never return that way again.’ And he shall not acquire many wives for himself, lest his heart turn away, nor shall he acquire for himself excessive silver and gold (Deuteronomy 17:14-17).

Questions:

  • What does the Bible teach about the importance of godly leaders?
  • What traits should be present?
  • What traits should be absent?
  • What possible dangers lurk when people have wicked rulers?
  • What blessings come via godly leaders?

Teaching: In the text above from Deuteronomy 17, God instructs Moses in all these issues so that he would model godly leadership. Peruse the text and see if you don’t see all of these things:

  • God blesses godly leadership. Leadership is inevitable. Someone will always take charge. The only question is, What kind of leader will he be?
  • The leader is to be “whom the Lord your God will choose” (Dt 17:15).
  • The leader is to be out for the team rather than out for self. The leader “must not acquire many horses for himself,” the text says in verse 16. In other words, if you see the leader using his position for his own agrandizement, “Houston, we have a problem.”
  • The leader is to be modest rather than self-absorbed. That’s what verse 17 teaches, namely, that the leader shall not “acquire for himself excessive silver and gold.”

Encouragement: It’s cliche for a reason: Organizations rise or fall based upon the quality of their leadership. “[I]f the foundations are destroyed, what can the righteous do?” (Ps 11:3). Let us be a discerning people who inculcate godly leadership.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #400: For Your Good

Text:

And now, Israel, what does the Lord your God require of you, but to fear the Lord your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul, and to keep the commandments and statutes of the Lord, which I am commanding you today for your good? (Deuteronomy 10:12-13)

Moses was summarizing the main points of God’s covenantal nature for Israel’s hearing. As the shepherd of the flock, a picture of Christ and his church, Moses shouldered an immense responsibility. He was charged with leading a people but to lead them in God’s ways. Why? For their good.

That’s the phrasing that Scripture uses in Deuteronomy 10:13. God does what he does for our good, for the good of his people, because God is good, and what God does is good.

But did you notice how the first section of the text above begins? Did you catch the first requirement God has for his people? We are to fear the Lord. Why? Because that is the beginning of wisdom. “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom” (Pr 9:10a).

It’s when we don’t revere the Lord that we fall into sin. Sin festers, infects, and destroys when we fear men as ultimate rather than fearing God.

But God is not a cosmic killjoy. That is the opposite of what Scripture reveals. For God’s people, Scripture teaches that in God’s presence is fullness of joy (Ps 16:11). That’s the way the human story began. We had fellowship with God. We walked with God. Eden was not just a real geographical location in the ancient Near East but it was a picture of what man was created for–fellowship with God and a creation fit for him that he was to steward. God had provided everything and pronounced it good. Moreover, God had created for man a helper suitable/fit for him, namely, the woman. And there you have the paradigm: a husband and wife, commanded to be fruitful and multiply, and to fill the earth as stewards responsible to God. And it was done for their good.

Encouragement: But the nature of sin is to thumb one’s nose at the wisdom of God’s ways and to believe the liar and father of lies. Yet God, being rich in mercy, has determined to save a people for himself: “even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved—” (Eph 2:5). God is the great rescuer of us spiritual rebels. And he does it all for our good and his glory. Those two things–our good and his glory–are inextricable.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #399: Why the ‘Shema’ Matters

Text:

Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might. And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates (Dt 6:4-9)

This was one of the first passages I committed to memory in my years of studying Scripture. It’s the Shema. That is from the Hebrew word for “Hear.” The emphasis here (pun intended) is upon hearing the Word of God and doing it. It’s the same principle Paul labors in Romans 10 where he writes, “So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ” (Rom 10:17).

Hear the Word and do the Word. The principle recurs in James’ letter, too: “But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves” (Jas 1:22). Hear but then do.

The Shema matters because it is the map for discipleship.

And the Lord teaches his people why this hearing and doing of the Word is crucial: “for the LORD your God [is] in your midst” (Dt 6:15). God is always present. When we experience that reality in our bones, it changes our heart, nature, mind, will, and affections.

Oftentimes I think we suppress that knowledge, just as Paul teaches in Romans 1: “For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness suppress the truth” (Rom 1:18). That’s the default position of the rebel: suppression of the truth of God.

Encouragement: God is “in the midst,” dear ones. Wherever you are, God is there. He is inescapable. Therefore, let God’s people both hear his Word and do his Word. Trust God with the results, because we will give an account (Rom 14:12).

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #398: You Have Lacked Nothing

Text:

“For the Lord your God has blessed you in all the work of your hands. He knows your going through this great wilderness. These forty years the Lord your God has been with you. You have lacked nothing” (Deuteronomy 2:7).

Context, Context, Context: Moses is leading the people “into the wilderness in the direction of the Red Sea” (Dt 2:1). He reminds Israel of the basics–God’s nature, God’s attributes regarding his steadfastness, his providence, his care, his being with them, his sovereignty. (The basics are called that for a reason; they’re the foundation upon which God’s people are to build and live. If we have wrong ideas about God, we invariably will have wrong ideas about people.) So Moses reminds the people constantly of basic theology–the fundamentals of God and his attributes.

And then Moses unpacks it for them even more by reminding them that God “knows your going through this great wilderness” (v. 7a). Let’s unpack that. In short, Moses reminds them that nothing escapes God’s knowledge. He is, after all, omniscient. He knows the people are in the wilderness. They are there because of their sin and recalcitrance, but also because God is teaching them about himself via his servant Moses.

Then in the second half of verse 7, Moses reminds them, “These forty years the LORD your God has been with you.” See the pattern? The immanence of God. All that means is that God has dwelled in the midst of his people. They’ve not been alone or just stuck with each other. God has been there all along, laboring to teach them via his servant Moses.

And then in the last clause of verse 7, Moses reminds them that they have “lacked nothing.”

Encouragement: Ever felt like you were in a spiritual wilderness? Ever felt caught between Migdol and the sea? Of course; we all have. Therefore, let us return to this basic and fundamental truth: We lack nothing because God is in the midst.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #397: Importance of Biblical Imagery

Text: “Let not steadfast love and faithfulness forsake you; bind them around your neck; write them on the tablet of your heart” (Pr 3:3).

Context, Context, Context: Like all the book of Proverbs, this is instruction in practical wisdom for everday living. The first part of the verse provides the negative, what not to do. Solomon, writing under the inspiration of God the Holy Spirit, tells his son to not to be the type of person who shirks steadfastness and faithfulness.

The seond part of the verse provides the positive, to bind those things like a necklace. Solomon says to “bind them around [our] neck; write them on the tablet of [our] heart.”

That imagery is so helpful. Why? Because we can all visualize it. We’re to don faithfulness and steadfastness upon us to such a degree that they become our custom, our habit (in the sense of a garment, too).

Then Solomon provides even more imagery to drive the point home. He says we are to “write them on the tablet of [our] heart.” The core of our nature in the biblical worldview is the heart. It’s the seat of what Edwards calls our “affections,” or our desires, will, mind, and emotions. When God’s law is written upon the heart of a person, the person is changed by divine, sovereign grace.

Encouragement: Last night before my wife and I retired to bed for the night, I was telling her about a friend of mine at work. I said, “Every time he and I are together, I just feel better. You can feel Jesus on him.” She knows well of whom I was speaking. She and I love this man, and it just so happens that he and my wife share the same childhood hometown. Why does my friend affect me and others the way he does? Well, he lives out Proverbs 3:3; it’s that simple. What a blessing.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #392: The Mercy of Intercession

Question: Have you ever thought about the meaning of intercession? “To intervene on behalf on another” is the meaning of the verb form of intercede.

Understanding intercession is fundamental to a biblical worldview. Why? Because Christ is the Christian’s great intercessor. He is our representative. The whole doctrine of imputation hinges upon Christ as our mediator.

That’s what Paul means when he writes to Timothy, “For there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus” (1 Timothy 2:5).

Christ is the Christian’s mediator, his intercessor.

A Glimpse Back at Recalcitrant People: Remember how often Moses interceded on behalf of sinful Israel? Remember how often the crowds complained to Moses that they had it better in bondage in Egypt? Here’s one example:

Then all the congregation raised a loud cry, and the people wept that night. And all the people of Israel grumbled against Moses and Aaron. The whole congregation said to them, “Would that we had died in the land of Egypt! Or would that we had died in this wilderness! Why is the Lord bringing us into this land, to fall by the sword? Our wives and our little ones will become a prey. Would it not be better for us to go back to Egypt?” And they said to one another, “Let us choose a leader and go back to Egypt.” (Numbers 14:1-4)

Moses as Intercessor:

Yet God was merciful. God was gracious. He had Moses, his intercessor. And Moses’ job, if you will? To petition the Lord on behalf of others.

Listen to Moses’ words:

And now, please let the power of the Lord be great as you have promised, saying, ‘The Lord is slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, forgiving iniquity and transgression, but he will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, to the third and the fourth generation.’ Please pardon the iniquity of this people, according to the greatness of your steadfast love, just as you have forgiven this people, from Egypt until now. (Numbers 14:17-19)

Encouragement: Do we understand the depths of God’s mercy and grace towards us sinners? God provided Moses as his intercessor on behalf of sinners. It’s a picture of the gospel, folks, where God was doing something through Christ, the ultimate intercessor and mediator, between God the holy and us, the sinners. Intercession is fundamental to a coherent understanding of the biblical narrative of redemption.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #386: Making ‘gods’

Text:

32 When the people saw that Moses delayed to come down from the mountain, the people gathered themselves together to Aaron and said to him, “Up, make us gods who shall go before us. As for this Moses, the man who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we do not know what has become of him.” (Exodus 32:1-2)

Context, Context, Context: Moses, the shepherd/intercessor/leader of Israel, had just come down from meeting with God atop Sinai: “And he [God] gave to Moses, when he had finished speaking with him on Mount Sinai, the two tablets of the testimony, tablets of stone, written with the finger of God” (Exodus 31:18). Moses had received the Decalogue from the Lord. They were ‘the ten words,’ if you will, from God. (They are, by the way, the basis of what’s left of civilization. Deny transcendence, deny human responsibility, deny individual property rights, deny law and order, and see what happens. You get chaos. But if folks cannot see that unfolding in front of their very eyes, I do not know how they will ever admit truth and reality until they stand before the Lord. You can deny both, but you don’t break them; they break you.)

Teaching: When Moses had been away from his people for a while, the people grew restless, unbelieving, and selfish. They demanded Aaron’s brother take charge and “make us gods who shall go before us” (Exodus 32:1b). In other words, all people everywhere are religious. It is only a matter of whether they worship the true God or an idol/false god.

Encouragement: In 2026, folks might scoff at this historical event of the golden calf and think, “What? Really? A bovine creature crafted with a gold patina?” Yes, folks. If you don’t worship the true God, you will worship necessarily at the altar of an idol–be it cows, self, power, popularity, or Satan; but you will worship.

This Sunday my family and I are praying that this weather will spare us and others, so that we can gather with the saints in worship of the true and living God, because he alone is worthy.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #382: God Alone

Question: Who is to receive glory?

Text:

But the Lord said to Moses, “Now you shall see what I will do to Pharaoh; for with a strong hand he will send them out, and with a strong hand he will drive them out of his land.”

God spoke to Moses and said to him, “I am the Lord. I appeared to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, as God Almighty, but by my name the Lord I did not make myself known to them. I also established my covenant with them to give them the land of Canaan, the land in which they lived as sojourners. Moreover, I have heard the groaning of the people of Israel whom the Egyptians hold as slaves, and I have remembered my covenant. Say therefore to the people of Israel, ‘I am the Lord, and I will bring you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians, and I will deliver you from slavery to them, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with great acts of judgment. I will take you to be my people, and I will be your God, and you shall know that I am the Lord your God, who has brought you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians. I will bring you into the land that I swore to give to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob. I will give it to you for a possession. I am the Lord.’” Moses spoke thus to the people of Israel, but they did not listen to Moses, because of their broken spirit and harsh slavery. (Exodus 6:1-9)

The Same Question: Who is to receive glory?

Who does God tell Moses will give Israel the land in verse 4? Who said He remembers the covenant in verse 5? Who will bring Israel out from under the burdens of the Egyptians in verse 6? Who will deliver the people from slavery and redeem via judgment in verse 6? Who has His people in verse 7? Who will bring the people out in verse 8?

Soli de Gloria: Over and over again, God reveals Himself to Moses in order to teach him and those he led one overarching lesson: God alone gets the glory.

It’s not about us. We’re the problem. We’re the recalcitrant ones. We’re the ones in need of redemption.

When we make ourselves the heroes in Scripture, we err grievously.

Encouragement: If you’re a Christian, dear ones, you’re to be humble. We’re not to be doing things for our glory. That’s pride, and stinks in the nostrils of God, and it repels people.

Moses was called the meekest of men. And look at how God used him. Want to be great? Be humble. Want to be used of God? Acknowledge that God is the hero of redemption; it’s not you or me. Give it all to the Lord, work hard, and trust God with the results.

Chaplain Daily Touchpoint #381: Reflections Upon Waking Up to Piano

It’s a federal holiday here in America in honor of Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. Despite his legacy being that we ought to be a people who judge people by character rather than skin pigmentation, few seem able to learn that fundamental wisdom. Ugly tribalism thrives among mob mentalities. In this postlapsarian world, I don’t think that will ever change for the undiscerning masses.

As a soldier, I, too, have a day off from work today to celebrate King’s legacy. He was by no means a perfect man. Scholarship has revealed that he was a philanderer and plagiarized much of his dissertation. As one who regularly has his words stolen, it is painful to endure. But each man will give an account one day. So, again, in this postlapsarian world, I do not anticipate a cessation of intellectual theft.

But I do not want to focus on King here or on tribalistic thinking or on intellectual theft. Rather, I want to write of waking up late this morning, of coming down the staircase, of hearing my wife practice “In Christ Alone” on the piano, and of what it means to have a God-fearing spouse.

It’s only Monday and she is already planning the piano pieces for next Lord’s Day. If you’re a Christian, and if you have a Christian spouse, there’s a benediction that you discover (if you pay attention). When I came down the stairs, she was printing off sheets of music, arranging parts for herself and other singers at church, and she asked me to record with her the melody and harmony lines in order that folks could hear their parts, based upon their registers.

I had a suspicion a quarter of a century ago when I proposed that marrying a sweet church girl from GA, a girl whose parents loved the Lord and served their church body, that I was making the right decision. Rather, it was that I discerned that God was making the decision for me in His provision of her in my life. That’s the hand of providence, dear ones.

But you have to have eyes to see that sort of thing. You have to be able to step out of tribalism, groupthink, and the mob mentality. You have to be quiet. If you are, you might hear the sounds of piano keys being played by your spouse’s slender fingers, and hear “In Christ Alone” as you awake and descend the stairwell for your morning coffee.